Taking a style cue from pal Justin Timberlake, Jimmy Fallon suited up for the April cover of GQ magazine's special Style Bible issue.

Fallon — who currently hosts "Late Night" for NBC — opened up to GQ on the possibility of taking over Jay Leno's spot as host of "The Tonight Show" and it appears he doesn't seem to care, either way.

"I mean, in the nicest way, who really cares. In the nicest way," Fallon told GQ. "It would be great, sure, I guess. I'd love it, but it's not on my mind. I'm in no rush to do anything."

Fallon also said he's not competing for the position — perhaps alluding to the well documented conflict between Leno and Conan O'Brien in early 2010 over the host and airtime of "The Tonight Show." Conan eventually left the network for cable TV.

"I'm kind of a boring character in that book. I'm not in a fight with Jay [Leno] or Conan [O'Brien], or any of them," Fallon said. "I don't have that story."

Earlier this week, the New York Times reported "The Tonight Show" will return to New York with Fallon at its helm, citing as sources several NBC execs involved in the decision. The Times said the network made a commitment to Fallon and the switch was likely to take place by fall 2014 the latest.

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Leno asked the audience: "Are you all excited about March Madness?"

"Are you all into March Madness?" he continued. "People are talking about who's in, who's out, who's gonna be eliminated. And that's just here at NBC. I've never been in the paper this much. It's fantastic."

Leno's current contract is up in 2014.

"The Tonight Show" taped in New York from 1954 to 1972, when Johnny Carson moved it to Burbank.